Just got this from a friend. The comments are not mine, but I fully agree with them. And no, we do not have diplomatic relations with Cuba because it is a communist country. Crap. If that were true we would not have relations with Viet Nam----which is also "communist." The coming attack on Iran is about money, and it is always about money. The banksters...."xxxxxxxx"
Subject: Fidel Castro Warns of Impending Nuclear War - US Will Attack both North Korea and Iran
Cuba is one of the very few nations on this planet that does not have a Rothschild-owned central bank. The other nations who, like Cuba, issue their own money debt-free and interest-free without any obligations to the international banks are Iran; North Korea; Sudan; and Libya. Castro’s 50-year-long defiance of the international money power has bought him unceasing vilification and endless assassination attempts; all emanating from the US.
It doesn’t require a whole lot of intelligence to understand that Castro is telling the truth.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100717/ts_nm/us_cuba_castro_fidel
Fidel Castro appears again, warns of war
HAVANA (Reuters) – Cuban revolutionary leader Fidel Castro took his warning of impending nuclear war to Cuba's Foreign Ministry on Friday, where he explained the reasons for his dire prediction in his fifth public appearance in 10 days.
Fidel Castro appears on Cuban TV, fears nuclear ...Castro's sudden re-emergence after four years in seclusion for health reasons has raised questions about his intentions, but his message has been consistent -- a devastating war is at hand if the United States, in alliance with Israel, tries to enforce international sanctions against Iran for its nuclear activities.
He also has predicted the United States will attack North Korea.
"The United States finds itself now in an unsolvable dilemma (in the Middle East). It cannot get out, nor can it stay," Castro told 115 ambassadors, who listened with rapt attention.
"It won't get out of that situation through diplomacy, but through the power of its arms," he said, pointing his finger in the air and pontificating at length as in the old days.
Castro, 83, spoke for more than an hour as he sat in front of the ambassadors. He looked fit, relaxed and fully in charge as he took questions and read numerous news reports to back up his position.
He said he had partially recovered from the "sudden and grave situation of health" that forced him from power.
Castro disappeared from public view following emergency intestinal surgery in July 2006 and ceded power to his younger brother, now President Raul Castro.
He resurfaced on July 7 at a scientific research center in Havana and has since made several appearances in person and in a videotaped television interview.
Theories abound about why the man who ruled Cuba for 49 years after taking power in a 1959 revolution has returned to public view. He has said his only interest is in warning the world of the coming conflict.
His reappearance has coincided with Cuba's biggest release of political prisoners since 1998, in a deal cut with the Catholic Church, and intentional or not, has drawn away from it.
The church announced on July 7 that 52 political prisoners, or about a third of the island's jailed dissidents, would be freed over the next few months. The releases began on Monday.
Wide-ranging speculation includes theories that Castro is sending a message of stability at a time of uncertainty about Cuba's future, that he felt his warning of war was being ignored, or that he simply wanted to return to the limelight.
The Cuban government has said nothing except for the reports of his visits in state-run media, which on Friday said Foreign Ministry employees and people from the surrounding neighborhood sent him off with a "prolonged ovation and emotional (shouts of) 'Viva.'"
(Additional reporting by Rosa Tania Valdes; Editing by Chris Wilson)--END
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